tv America Reports FOX News September 13, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT
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money, but it's okay because this is unimportant compared to saving the united states of america. so i do it for that reason. but that is the numbers kamala harris' policies will do to america. the cost is nearly 40% higher than the national average and the cost of housing 97% higher than the national averages through the roof and it all took place in the last three and a half years because i have no inflation, essentially no inflation. and it stayed that way for two and a half, two years. so it wasn't like oh code you g, we had it down to a science, no inflation and 1.4% which is perfect and better than no, a perfect number. if you go to the economist because you want a little bit but you don't want much. it is a perfect number. it was perfect. the country was perfect. we were drilling and we were now
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buying oil from venezuela. it is not even believable. it is interesting, they give him billions of dollars, maduro, the dictator and i call him the owner of venezuela. they give him billions and billions of dollars but then they foreclose on his plane. they take away an old junky plane. it's not a good plane. they take away an old, junky plane and they say okay, he will buy a much better one. think about it, of the country takes away his airplane pepe's him billions of dollars for their oil, which is the worst oil and it is tar and has to be. there was only one plant and the entire world to refined that junk. you know where it is located? used in texas but the environmentalist houston, texas, is refining tar. and that stuff is going up into the air. what is the only place in the whole world that can refine that very bad stuff. the state is rapidly going faster with a record $68 million
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budget deficit last year. $60 million budget deficit for a state. and the government is so incompetent that it cost $1.7 million to install a single public toilet in san francisco. they built a toilet for $1.7 million. and it's not even nice. >> sandra: donald trump to speak at rancho palos verdes, california, john. and he's been going 44 minutes so far it. 35 minutes or so and counting. and laying out a message to voters about why he thinks kamala harris is a bad choice for president. he has been basically laying out on a case-by-case basis. you know, people that she did not choose to hold accountable for some pretty violent crimes in california. also, describing some horrific things that have been done by some migrants illegally in this
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country. painting a picture that this is what you would get if you voted for kamala harris for president. >> john: we still don't have indication if he will take questions from the assembled media when he is finished his litany of horrible's about kamala harris. but we will continue to watch it and jump back in if he does take questions. in the meantime, fox news contributor steven hilton mucho with the rest of the great state of california. trump said a lot of things about kamala harris there and a lot of people say it should have brought up during the debate but didn't. do you think this can move the needle at all? >> it is incredibly part of the argument because when you want to find out what kamala harris presidency would mean for the rest of the country, you don't need to imagine it but you can look at california. exactly as he laid out, there are two parts to that. they are the specific things she did in the office so she holding
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california, san francisco district attorney and state attorney general in particular, of the downgrading of a series of absolutely appalling crimes. so they wouldn't carry automatic jail sentences, including sex trafficking of children. arape of unconscious person and that is absolutely true she led the charge to downgrade those crimes. as a prosecutor, she keeps going on until prosecutors was. it was the opposite. for example a vicious violent crime, a murder committed by illegal immigrant while san francisco d.a. and this person run over someone on a motorbike multiple times. and she ended up downgrading that to a misdemeanor. the guy got 45 days in jail. that is category number 1. the specific things she did but the broader point is a policy agenda that she is now arguing for, that is the agenda we have been living under here in
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california because of the democratic party's one-party rule for all these years. and it has resulted in the highest poverty rate in the country. brought us the highest unemployment and highest inequality. she goes on about housing but the policy she is talking about nationally have delivered in california the highest housing cost in america and the lowest homeownership. on and on, every single issue you are talking about. a really good example is price controls and we have talked about that a lot in terms of economic policy. the biggest announcement she made. we have price controls in a particular area in california. insurance, and now millions of people in california who literally can't get insurance and can't get insurance for your car. you can't get insurance for your home. that is the consequence of her policy agenda. yes, it is vital to look what is going on and will tell you what happens if she takes these policies nationally. >> sandra: he is obviously seeing this as a moment to take her on as we are reporting on
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these gangs that are moving into some of these american cities. the actions we have seen using this as an opportunity to highlight that she was put in a leadership role on the border inside the biden-harris white house. this is what we are getting. does it move him to stick on this message and not focus on the economy? we know this is a huge concern for so many american voters who still live through this inflation crisis, steve. >> i think you are right, sandra. and the end it right selection for a good reason hundred people feel the impact of economic policy very, very directly and everyone feels the impact of economic policy. so, a simple message that delivers the contrast is that people can remember because it was not that long ago the good times. the good economic times that we had when donald trump was president. so the sump argument of bringing back those good times, the same
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kind of policy agenda contrasting with what you had and have now under biden-harris is absolutely the heart of it because everyone can relate to that. everyone can remember it was much better just a few short years ago. spin when you know, steve cody rhodes of former president point happened during the debate where he was fact-check every opportunity. and kamala harris had a lot of prayer verifications and she was, in fact-checked once but the president said a couple of things during the use availability right now that should be fact-checked and that is most of the haitians who were in springfield, ohio, are either in the country illegally or qualify for temporary protected status. but a lot of people say he's got a point for complaining about the fact-checking that went on on tuesday night. if you get back check, do both sides equally. >> exactly, it is really
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grotesque the bias on display. i think that is why you are saying although a lot of the pennants immediately said, well, kamala harris won the debate and so on. regular people see unfairness on display and you hear from the polls showing actually donald trump won the debate. very contrary to what the pundits said and on display in the debate in the form of president trump just as you see now in this event we have been watching. someone who knows his stuff, right? not everyone loves the way he presents the arguments but he knows what he's talking about. he has been present made decisions. 1 of the most interesting parts of the debate how he led us into his thinking about how he does deals and negotiates weather with nato on funding or the taliban or anything else. he really was showing us his approach. and with kamala harris, you could not get that at all and you have no clue what she would be like as president. i don't think she knows. she is reciting things she think
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will help her get elected. >> sandra: steve, if you could standby with us, we will head back to the former president who is speaking live and taking questions now. >> former president trump: she may have said something based on what she is telling me but i don't know what she said. i will take a look and put out a statement later on but i really don't know, please. yes. well, we could and maybe we will do that. where are you from? that is good. very good. they are doing a good job. very good. know, i will joe may be springfield and maybe aurora, may be both, can say this, we will do large deportations from springfield to ohio. large deportations. we will get these people out. we are bringing them back to venezuela. we told biden, not accepting anybody back. they moved all the criminals not all of them but the rest of them moving in now and they empty jails and empty criminals and
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emptied the nests, nessa bad people. they are in the united states and taking over cities. like an invasion within and we will have the largest deportation in the history of our country, and we will start with springfield and aurora. >> reporter: the mayor of springfield and the police chief republican governor of ohio debunk the story about people eating pets and out bomb threats at schools and kids being effectuated. why do you still spread -- >> former president trump: is a real threat is what is happening at the border because we have thousands of people being killed by illegal migrants coming in. and also dying -- you have women tying as they come up. they are coming up in large groups. we call it a caravan of. i think i came up with that name but it is really what it is always joe 10,000, 15,000, 20,000 people. large number of women being killed in the caravan coming to the country. when they get here, they can go
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into the country, and they end up being and everything else. those are your real problems, not the problem you are talking about. >> referee: you said you will carry out the largest mass deportation of illegal immigrants but how are you going to have for example governor gavin newsom and sanctuary cities comply with that? >> former president trump: well, you know, if you go to the people of california, they don't want sanctuary cities anymore. they are tired of sanctuary cities. sanctuary cities are blocks that protect bad people from deportation and other problems. and they will do it in our federal government has tremendous power. but we will not let states even like california, even though i know largely sanctuary state essentially. but we will not let that happen to the people of california. they want these people out. they are just as scared as everybody else. the people of ohio are scared here to the people of colorado, you have a governor
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there who is weak and doesn't know what to do and he doesn't want to talk about it. as for your question, they don't want to talk about what is happening. but is so bad for the city so let's not go public and live with them for a little while and it will go away. it will not go away, it will get worse and it will get so bad. what we are experiencing now is they are just getting settled in, 21 million people who have come in are just getting settled in. it will get much worse, much worse at a level nobody has seen before, go ahead. >> reporter: follow-up question regarding the economy, we see more and more companies shipping their jobs overseas. but white-collar jobs, they are having mass layoffs. how would you prevent these white-collar jobs from being -- >> former president trump: by lowering taxes and regulations. what they are doing is seeing that every time it looks like kamala is doing well, companies want to lead. stock markets go down. the stock market, there is a
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great gentleman, scott, one of the top wall street people said the market is only up because they think trump is going to get elected. we had a great stock market and even with covid, we handed over a market higher than previous to covid or the china virus coming in. we are going to make sure that texans are going to stay where they are and/or come down, ideay come down and pulled for the mid corporations because corporations put the people to work. we have the best numbers in the history of our country by far, not even close. and there are companies leaving. because they cannot stand what is happening right now to our country. in one of the reasons that i'm doing this today is to let themo have to leave because we will take care of the problem. they have a tremendous crime problem. if you are in los angeles go to look at the crime numbers. we'll h have a feeling about the numbers. anyone with common sense know the numbers are through the roof
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and i didn't know if they were as high as they are. think about it, how good is a person from government agency to release the numbers when they saw when i was unfairly targeted by abc. and you can say by the fbi with false numbers. i have to find out who that person is or who that group is, but i have great respect -- go ahead, one more. >> reporter: north korea kim jong un with a rhenium facility and u.s., iran sending ballistic missiles. how would you address the situation with our adversaries? >> former president trump: i will be will to make phone calls and solve most of the probe homes. we may have to meet a couple of times. but viktor orban and you have heard me say this but it wasn't long ago the only way you will solve the promise trump has to be president again and i didn't say it. i sort of would be embarrassed to say it, but he said everybody who is afraid of trump, china was afraid, russia was afraid,
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north korea was afraid. we had no wars and defeated isis in four weeks and they said it would take five years, right? the generals in washington. i went there i met a great general and lots of great people. when i said, "go to it does quote and took them out in four weeks 100% of the isis caliphate and i flew to the field and they took them out. in a short pared of time, short order. we have a great military but great military needs a leader and if you don't have leaders, you end up with afghanistan. the worst withdrawal in the country in the history -- look, i've gotten to know great people. i've gotten to know people at their request and i stood with them for hours and data ceremony and asked me if i would go down to the graves of their children and they called them they were children and always will be their children. there were tears all over as they are should be. sir, could you take pictures with me? by the grave of my son, in one
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case a daughter. i said, "i would love to." i took pictures with him for a while and then i get home and get a call from the people on the campaign. biden, people are saying you did this for publicity. if people knew how hard it was to get there because i was coming from a location very far away and yet, they were having to ceremony. i really felt i had them up bedminster most of the family members. i got to know them and they were great people. they are sons and daughter just as though kamala shot them with a pistol in her hand or his hand. they were killed by bi biden and kamala. they were killed. they should have never left from the airfield. they should have left for bob graham and we should never give up bob graham and bob is now controlled by china. the reason we should not give them up is not because of afghanistan but the reason we should not give them up one hour
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away from china makes nuclear weapons and i wasn't giving it up. we were giving out quickly and effectively and on the ones who got it down to some 5,000 soldiers but i would have never left unless they fulfilled obligations. i had a wonderful agreement but the agreement said you have to do this, this, this, and they didn't know three of the five things. abdul was a leader and he would not have done it and he would have never done that and finishing up at that, i appreciate the question but in finishing up with that, for 18 months, i spoke to abdul over the phone for 18 months. not one american soldier was shot or killed, not one american soldier was even shot at. abdul understood, don't do it who joe do it, abdul. for 18 months, not one soldier was shot out and that is the way
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it supposed to be. and then they had that horrible situation with the 13 dead leaving billions of dollars of equipment behind. leaving a lot of americans behind. a lot of americans. do know what else? leaving a lot of soldiers badly wounded and nobody talks about them, but i do. reporter. >> reporter: will the government shutdown? what is the policy difference for the people of california, and what is the nature ship the relationship would be with the leaders of california that you call scum? >> former president trump: i would have a great relationship and start all over and you cannot have higher taxation. you cannot have policies of politicians. you have to have an honest voting system because you don't have an honest voting system. they send out millions and millions of ballots at goal over the the place.
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some people get two, three, four, five and a disk on a system. if i ran an honest vote in california i would win met california but the boats are not counted honestly. it is a dishonest system in california and i would make it business friendly. right now it is business unfriendly. look, elon musk is a friend of mine and he endorsed me powerfully. he endorses me every time i speak because we can do a good job and turn it around. he left california and i said, elon, didn't anybody call you? a big company moved to texas on a lot of people moving to texas. great state an excellent governor and lieutenant governor, great people. they love entrepreneurs they love the people that live there. they want to keep their taxes low. taxes are way too high. i said, elon, you have a big company and you're moving to texas from california. did anybody call you like the governor to try to get you to
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stay? no. did anybody see you write a letter or do anything to try to compute a state? thousands of jobs which are nobody ever called. there would be so many things you could do. this would be the easiest place to turn around if they knew what to do. look at the rather. we are standing on the pacific ocean and the most beautiful weather. a lot of states don't have weather like this. they don't have pacific ocean's. many things you can do that you start lowering taxes and make it friendly. think of it, elon musk, a great guy, brilliant guy, big company and lots of jobs leaving but nobody calls him to try to get him to stay. i would have been on him and said, "let's have lunch, dinner, breakfast the following morning, right?" i should talk them out of it. >> reporter: what value do you
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feel brings to you? has nobody told you about the conspiracy theory? >> former president trump: no, i don't know that much about it. i know she is a big fan of the campaign, but i don't know. >> reporter: is she an advisor? >> former president trump: she brings a spirit to us a lot of people have. we have very spirited people. in all fairness to her, she hates seeing what happened to the country, i guess, hates what seeing happening to the country and so do i. it is sad to stand on my property and see how bad california's. >> reporter: mr. president, did you change your mind -- the people of california feel like they are forgotten men and women the. >> former president trump: they are at. >> reporter: you are coordinating with a local mayor but what can you do to help the community? >> former president trump: we will help them and i told john who chose a local man that we will help him with his slight problem. there are ways to fix it and he knows better than anybody. he needs help from the federal government any needs help help from the state government.
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it is a very wealthy area, but you have people living here that are elderly and have fixed incomes and have houses that are going to be shoved into the pacific ocean if something is not done. he wants it taken care of. he is a great mayor. we wants it taken care of. he wants nothing for himself but just to help these people. john, i think you said you had 600 houses on the site sliding. he would like to be able to save those houses for people that some of which will never be able to have a house again. pretty sad to. >> reporter: mr. president, should the government shutdown? >> lockdown provision and soon, will you sell your shares? >> former president trump: no, i love it and i get a message of my word appeared when i opened it went way high but sc gave problems and we had to go through long process with the sec. put people think i'm leaving and that is why they are down.
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if i leave -- but i'm not leaving no joy love it and i think it is great. mechanically it works the best. i'm friendly with elon and elon would let me to come over to x but i have close to 100 million people on x and 230 million people on x and they shut me down. not going to let that happen again. you know that i had hundreds of millions of people on x and facebook and instagram. i think more than anybody and zuckerberg set up the white house, congratulations, yo u are number one on facebook. a number of years ago and all of a sudden number one to having no voice. after two or three weeks, i had a lot to say and i put out old fashion press statements. and they got really successful. they did very well. and then we built this platform. the reason he built it is because i don't want to be -- i don't want to have my voice shut down. but a lot of people think that i will sell my shares.
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you know they are worth billions of dollars. i don't want to sell my shares and i won't sell my shares. i don't need money. it is a great voice for me. and it is a voice that worked so well. we just we got final approval from the sec and it took us a long time. that really turned it off. you know when i originally opened that stop, it went from about 2% to about 182 joe digenova that? the biggest increase in the history of the stock market and i have to believe because you will find one company but i believe it was the single biggest movement and i think 61 billion from that one stock. then we had nothing but problems with the sec. and it gets whittled down and down and down. but i didn't do it for the money. i did it because i wanted to have a strong voe and it is a great voice for me. it as long as my voice is on there, it will always be good.
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a lot of people think the reason it is down is because a lot of people think i will sell a. if i sell, it wouldn't be the same, i can understand that. i have absolutely no intention of selling. >> reporter: should the government shutdown? >> reporter: talking about california and we have fire reaching to the east. >> former president trump: i agree, i agree. >> reporter: what we hope people in the state with homes damaged again and again and falling off of the cliffs right behind us were burned down or what can the people across the country do who are jeopardized? >> former president trump: this is my favorite question of the day. you were asked me what what i do? let's talk california first, is that okay? do you mind? so i was writing with devin nunes and some congressman of four years ago and writing up north in california. and i looked at these fields that were messed up and i was telling john, right which of my favorite question and i love
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somebody would ask me this question and i never told you to do it. who are you with? good, spectrum, good, new, ought doing well but that's because you asked good questions. what happened, i look at this field and it is massive and in the middle of the field is little spot of the most burning, plush land you have ever seen. and i said, i see another one, another one little plots of one or 2 acres and you have a thousand acres that are barren and dead and dark. what is the problem here? it is the green acreage? this will is unbelievably fertile but they have no water. do you have a drought? no, the waters cut off upstate in the north. do you know that? the water in order to protect a certain tiny little fish called a smell, they send millions and millions of gallons of water oup north and never gets close to here. you know in los angeles and beverly hills and all these rich
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areas, i want to give you like 38 gallons of water. you buy a house for a lot of money and use 38 gallons of water. but you have no water down here. and the reason you have no water, you have the canals. the reason you have no water is because gavin newsom didn't want to do it. i have it all done. i had the department of commerce at the time, believe it or not, they are the ones that rule on this particular issue. so you have millions of gallons of water pouring temperament the north with the snow caps in canada and all pouring down. and they have essentially a very large faucet. and you turn the faucet and it takes one day to turn it. it is massive. it is as big as the wall of that building right there behind you. and you turn that and all of that water goes into aimlessly into the pacific. and if they turn it back, all of that water would come right down here and right into los angeles.
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they would have to have people not use more than 30 gallons and 32 gallons. they want to do that, they are trying to do that. so much water. all of those fields that are right now barren, farmers would have all the water they needed to. you could revert water up into the hills where you have all the dead forests and where the forests are so brittle because no places like california. i go to austria and the head of austria tells me, you know, we have trees much more flammable than what you have in california. we never have forest fires because they maintain the forests are to have all that water that could be used what they call water flow where the water in the land would be damp. and you would stop many of these horrible fires that are costing billions and billions of dollars by the federal government to saturate. 1 thing i will do for california, vote for me, california. i will give you safety. i will give you a great border and i will give you more water
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than almost anybody has. the farmers up north will use 100% of the land and not 1% of their land. the water will come all the way down to los angeles and you will have more water than you ever saw. and the smelt is not making it anyway. impact, they make and grow smelt because it dies all up and down the line and put staff artificially made. you know that. so you will have water in california at a level you have never seen before. the farmers are going to do great. those fields will be all green instead of 1% grain. more importantly, you will not have illegal immigrants pouring into your country and killing your family. you will not have the palms you have right now it. we will lower your taxes and bring the car industry back because your car industry is gone. we will bring it back to detroit at level she will never see again. we will bring it back to better than it was 30 years ago. but this group everything is dead, the art of mill bill industry is dead and the water
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coming here is dead. and gavin newsom is going to sign those papers. if he doesn't sign those papers, we will not give him money to put out all the fires. if we don't give him the money to put out inspires, he's got problems. he is a lousy governor, and he treated me very nicely and i treated him nicely and i was president, buddy he has done a lousy job here or there a case. avenue, will you sign it? it took a month and a half and two months but he decided for political reasons. we got hit with covid and we had to solve another problem. you will have so much money, mr. mayor, so much money from economic activity and growth. and you will have water like you never thought. in your case, maybe you don't want so much water but we will bypass your beautiful area. but we have tremendous amounts, millions of gallons of water that is shoved right into the pacific ocean where it doesn't make a dent. and all of that water is going to take care of california.
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and nobody can make a bigger promise than that. you are not going to have to do you sell an invitation plans, very expensive to do. it is better than the alternative of no water. so california, vote for trump and you will have water and you will have growth and you will have prosperity in all of those people that are leaving will come back. thank you very much. >> reporter: mr. president, showed the government shutdown? >> sandra: wide ranging questions and wide, john, to say the least but the big focus was on crime or immigration for the former president. i want to point out as he did in the debate, there was one point he referenced what he sees as fudge numbers from the fbi on violent crimes. the statistics in the country, he said just omit some cities and headed to make the numbers look better and make it actually looked like violent crime has gone down. we have no evidence to suggest the fbi has done that. but with that being said, he
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seems to see this as an avenue to get voters attention and to be highlighting what is happening with the american cities who have been inundated with a rise of migrants. >> john: no evidence to suggest the fbi did that deliberately to make the numbers look better to support either biden or harris. but certainly the justice department released numbers yesterday which shows crime about the same level as it was two years ago and up substantially from 2020. so in terms of fact-checking with the president said that the debate on tuesday, those statistics would appear to back up what the president claimed that crime is way up. where it was when he left office and remains high. >> sandra: we will keep digging into those numbers. it is obviously one of those things like the economy, you see numbers you don't necessarily feel. you see the polling question whether people feel safe in their own neighborhoods, it is a huge issue for voters over the
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country, john. >> john: fox news contributor steven hilton for more on this as we unwrap and unravel what the president said over the course of about an hour and 5 minutes. that was notable, steep, for the most part because the former president stood up in front of the assembled media are about 35 minutes and gave his litany of horrible's regarding kamala harris and what he would do if he were president again. and then took questions for another 25 minutes. and that is something that kamala harris has certainly not done in the course of her campaign. >> of course, because she actually doesn't know what she thinks on any policy issue because she is reading out the lines given to her by her handlers in the hope they will persuade people to vote for her. what you saw there from trump is someone who really understands the substance of policies. a side of him that doesn't come out enough, in my view, particularly the california issues which i know very well. he had on three issues there
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with great substance, great details and in these were not prepared remarks. number one the business climate in california, he is absolutely right. we have the worst business climate in america ten years in a rope photo by chief executives. he has exactly right and that is why businesses are leaving. to say if he was in charge he would try to work to get businesses and entrepreneurs to have the kind of conditions that would make them flourish in california and elsewhere her toe that is exactly what we need here. secondly on water, he got it exactly right and there was a policy, deliberate policy in california to restrict water from agricultural industry which is the greatest in the world. we have the most fertile soil in the world in california. we feed the world, not just america. it is deliberately sabotaged by misguided policies in the name of some environmental goals, which does not make sense. i meant the central valley of california all the time. yesterday i was there and the
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day before here were yeah you see millions of acres being required to be fellow and they l turn it to dust bowls and you get real environmental damage as a direct result of the policies and he knows what he's talking about. wild fires, he is completely right and we could have better forest management which actually revise the timber industry in california because you can use the timber you take out of the forest. he is correct about all of this and spontaneously speaks to the topics that you could never imagine from kamala harris. i think we need to see more of that from trump. by the way, if you want to understand the solutions to these problems that is what i'm working on my organization together with policy reports on three issues and more. trump is exactly right on all of them. >> sandra: he is likely to hold a lot of these until election day. do you see these moments? that was pretty lengthy speech in detail. he took a lot of questions.
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is he addressing the concerns voters have right now? >> yes. honestly i think he's better in response to the questions because more of the detail comes out and he really shows that he's in command of the substance and the issues. all of those points he hits on, these are the core things people want their leaders to address. the economy, crime, open border chaos and all those things he talked about. that is what the election should be about here in california as i mentioned, those are vital which was for everyone. we need to see more of that substance and then the contrast between the trump policy agenda and basically substance free kamala harris agenda where it is platitudes and slogans. but she clearly doesn't leave and for goodness sake, the idea of kamala harris now is somehow a fan of fracking when just a couple of years ago, she was authoring and cosponsoring the prenew deal in the senate is jut
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preposterous. everybody knows she is just saying this stuff. in office, she would revert back to the power base democratic party these days as we see in california, which is the active is far left group in the unions just as bernie sanders said. >> sandra: >> sandra: steven hilton, thank you for hanging with us through all of it. appreciated. >> it is a pleasure. >> john: we will see if kamala harris mirrors what donald trump does and takes a bunch of questions. air force with heavy air strikes in several areas of western syria on sunday. a live report from tel aviv coming up next. ♪ ♪
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they were to cover up a daring operation and mike tobin is live in tel aviv right now it. might, aggressive for israel to insert troops in syria but what more do we know right now? well, we know, sandra unusually bold raid by israeli commandos. reportedly took out reported missile production facility deep inside of syria. according to numerous reports dozens of commandos inserted by a helicopter into the area around the town north of lebanon. officially the target is called the scientific studies and research center. israel believes the center was developing medium and long-range precision to be fired in israel like hezbollah. they had struck a target before without much effect because the important parts were all built underground. this time, commandos used to and carry explosives into the facility and guarantee destruction. the syrian health minister said 18 syrians killed and 37
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injured. >> it does not run the risk of escalating the situation in the region. what does run the risk of escalating tensions in the region's border patrol and the west bank. i think that is significant concern because we are seeing an increased palestinian respectively in the indoors areas. >> and is really forces have stepped up activity in the west bank in recent days and several palestinian towns and jordan valley. israel troops that killed palestinian fighters and egg located car bomb in a tunnel and troops destroyed balm labs and seized catchphrase of weapons. so far no reports of casualties on the israeli side, said and drop. >> sandra: mike tobin out of out of tel aviv with that, john. 's view of the future of miami dolphins is up in the air after he went down with a concun last night's game against the bills.
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third quarterback's third concussion as an nfl player and there are questions whether he should ever take the field again. let's bring in the doctor who is a cheap harvard medical school division of brain injury rehabilitation and a man who knows a lot about this, and i want to play back again they hits last night as he was trying to run for first d down and maye make a touchdown. and he runs into damar hamlin and his head sort of rattles back and forth and you can see according to chris lewinsky who is concussion expert the way his body reacts is a sign, a hallmark of severe concussion. what do you say? >> so what he is showing is what is called a response. what that indicates is a problem with the connections of the most advanced part of the brain to the base of the brain. that is definitely an indication of any injury to the brain tissue and it is deafly something that is very troublesome and worrisome.
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>> john: this report about the third time he's been down with a concussion twice in 2022 and he suffered concussions once during a game against the bengals bengals and another during a game against the packers. people might say he has a quarterback most of the time you slide into a tackle and don't get hit in the head. people try to take you down but the journey of neurotrauma started this back in 2015 and found although defensive backs had the highest incidence of concussions with the national football league, quarterbacks have the greatest risk of injury for 100 game athletic exposures. i guess it is because, dr., everybody wants to get the quarterback joe. >> the problem is it's not just the head-to-head kind of impacts that linemen get that causes concussions but actually rotational forces that are more likely to cause impact like you see with tagovailoa here where his head twists and turns. that location of the brain is most likely to cause an injury. >> john: you look and you
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wonder how he didn't break his neck there. it is also ironic, dr., the defender he runs into an defender was putting on a typical tech guy tackle but damar hamlin everybody remembers last year dropped dead on the field from a blow to the chest at the time the heart rhythm where it was most vulnerable. it really does between the two of them dramatically illustrate the dangers that continue in this game. >> i mean, nobody really felt that football was a compl completely -- completely safe sport when you were talking about athletes of this size and speed and athletic ability. running at high speeds into each other. but i played football in middle school and in high school, you know, we certainly know these games have a risk. but it is our job to make sure the risks are well managed, that we are doing everything we can to protect athletes. >> john: so the big question
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will fill up and take the field and ron gronkowski on fox, this is what he said. >> if it is truly life-threatening to play again, then yes, you don't play again if you are tagovailoa but it is a concussion and i've had the same amount of concussions as tagovailoa and maybe that explains things, i guess. >> john: if he goes through the protocol and out to the mid part of october they think, can he fully recover or will the damage linger? >> the problem is that there is no such thing as being fully cleared short-term to play after a brain injury. you can imagine if you get your shoulder popped out, it takes less force to pop that shoulder out again. that you are more likely to have long-term and lingering issues. should you would not be surprised 20 years down the line, a shoulder doesn't work
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the way of that supposed to. but your brain is to show your shoulder. might be able to recover where you are not experiencing amount of symptoms but the more brain injuries you get, the more they add up and more likely you will have problems later in life. >> john: we certainly hope that he does return to the game. he is historic quarterback for a big nfl team and a valuable player for them. certainly, too soon in his career to leave the field. we hope and wish him a speedy recovery and hope he makes it back into the game. dr., great to share your expertise,. >> sandra: let's head to space now and nasa boeing starliner astronaut stuck in space for lack of a better word. they are speaking live publicly about their extended mission there and what it is like stuck at the space station. let's listen. to leave your family behind is one thing but i wonder if there is a silver lining for you
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with this extended stay? i'm not talking about all these great science and all the maintenance and the work. but this home away from home. and i think may be, sunny, your spouse said this is your happy place. if you could candidly talk about that and getting the extra time you did not plan for and what that is like. >> i will tell you, i will answer this with respect to the family part. trying times and this is my daughter -- i will miss most of her senior year of high school, my youngest daughter. and my oldest daughter is a sophomore at east texas baptist university. and i was not able to be with her during the summer. but like i said earlier, we try to teach them the principles that are important and let them understand that trials, however you judge what a trial might be makes you stronger.
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in that respect, i'm grateful, i'm grateful it has played out the way it has and we are here, save, a place we are both familiar with and doing things we actually enjoy doing. but for them, it is different. they will learn from this and they will grow from this. and like they never could have any other situation. for that, i am grateful. >> i think you hit the nail on the head. my husband has said that my mom too. this is my happy place and i lived to be in space. bit is fun. you know, everyday you do something that is worked and you can do it upside down, you can do it sideways. so it adds a little bit different perspective. about staying up here longer, one of the things i was sort of regretting about a short duration flight is, i wasn't going to be able to share with a lot of people. 1 of the things i like to do up here is a recap of the week and send it down to people so they
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can see what fun we are having and what kind of work we are doing up here because it is so much different than being on earth. i think it opens up the door of making you think a little bit differently perspective. and have that opportunity. i think i was on week 12 of writing a journal to send down to folks and i'm fortunate about that to be able to send it to people and they can understand what we are doing up here. and see that yeah, we are living in a remote area but doing world-class science as well as living with other people for the betterment of so much. and being able to have a perspective out the window as well as a perspective upside down or sideways is something that i hope we can pass on to the rest of humanity. >> all right,, the next question with -- >> sandra: so many thoughts and so many comments likely from jimmy failla when he joins us as we watch the space station lived
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>> football season has kicked off and that means fans are dropping big bucks wagering in favour of their favourite teams. in a report estimates nfl fans will bet more than $35 billion the season through retail and online sports books. the real star is here fox news saturday night host jimmy fail. we are hoping we could chat nasa >> i'm just wondering wouldn't help to tie the hair down, but maybe that was for the dramatic effect. >> he's thinking about the american people like you know if they need to see what now is an upside down wedge eaten space because he did that upside down move. we want them to get home safe and we don't want anyone to ever tell them their story about missing a connecting flight in chicago. they don't want to hear it. they're going to be there until february. >> might be me or talk about. the sports betting.
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>> i love you book me for the segment because i look like iowa bulky money. but it's huge for the nfl and it does to make things. it drives ratings for the league because now the outcome of the game has a far more profound meaning on you. time was people could watch a football game and have the heartbroken but now they can have their knees broken. that does make you die a little bit harder and i come from 1 of those houses. i grew up on a big gambling house. my family still eats the chicken in times square. these are gamblers. >> this is therapeutic. we know there's a lot of endorsements out there in the entertainment world and obviously patrick mahomes is in the sports world what tied into the entertainment world. his wife has been hanging out with taylor swift. she endorsed kamala harris. so he disaster or he stands in this election. >> i don't want my place in my platform to be used to endorse a candidate or do whatever either
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way. i think my places to inform people to get registered to vote and inform people to do their own research and then make the best decision for them and their family. >> number 1 you don't want to silence anybody to deny them the platform of the truth is sports used to be common culture. it was a place for us to put our differences aside. and be able to get past politics. comedies to do that in movies, the fact that he's bringing back common culture will help us more in the long run because it creates less division on the truth is that she's making $40 million a year to throw football. they are not paying for real. i'm saying that's a good thing. he's not making $40 million because they want to hear is border policy. it's because he's profoundly talented a monsef to speak for itself. you know how much money is happening the nfl stadium on a weekend i'm still paying financing on a hot dog i bought at a jets game in 1997 because it's at expensive so good him for keeping attention on the game.
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>> speaking of expensive apparently the election has a lot of people overspending. there's a wall street journal article about this. the headline why my overspending? blame it on politics read the headline. collection fatigue has me and my friend so anxious that we find solace in buying more stuff than we should. is a surreal thing? >> if you want to take no personal responsibility for your own well-being. we are very much a pass the buck society. it's like i was going to balance my checkbook but have you seen the barometric pressure lately? nobody wants to take ownership of their situation. there are people fatigue? yeah, i don't out there. but if elections are driving any type of spending i would assume it's liquor. you're not buying pants because you don't agree with trump's talking points or kamala evading questions what you might be ordering another double from the bartender. >> it got tamayo was supposed to be a simple weekend away we find ourselves griping but the overly loud political ads breaking into reality tv binges and low
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five-eighth playlists. the idea of treating ourselves with larger and larger extra seems to help keep us from being overwhelmed at least for a little while and that's our simple weekend morphed into a bougie beach getaway with oysters and champagne. we contemplated tacking on spot trips to the overall bill. >> can you put any of that under the category of necessary? yes if you are doing gymnastics to justify runaway spending. number gretchen anybody there good time but i am jealous of the astronaut stuck in space right now because they know how to deal with any of the. >> great to see you. good to have you here. i feel so much better spee that they will have a heckuva taxco and the get down to earth. >> thanks for joining ey i'm sandra smith. have a great weekend. the story with martha starts right now.
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